FreedomBox/HACKING.md
Johannes Keyser f0f2d21562
doc: update HACKING, CONTRIBUTING and INSTALL information
- use markdown more explicitly
 - update information on i18n and translation
 - move or delete redundant info from HACKING into CONTRIBUTING

Signed-off-by: Johannes Keyser <johanneskeyser@posteo.de>
Reviewed-by: Sunil Mohan Adapa <sunil@medhas.org>
2018-01-15 12:57:28 +05:30

5.8 KiB

Hacking

Setting Up Development Environment Using Vagrant

Vagrant is a free software command line utility for managing the life cycle of virtual machines. The FreedomBox project provides ready-made virtual machines (VMs) for use with Vagrant. These images make setting up an environment for Plinth development rather simple: You can edit the Plinth source code on your host and immediately see the effects in the running VM. The entire setup is automatic and requires about 4.5 GB of disk space.

  1. Install Vagrant and VirtualBox:

    $ sudo apt-get install virtualbox vagrant
    
  2. To download, setup, run, and configure a VM for Plinth development using Vagrant, simply execute in your Plinth development folder:

    $ vagrant up
    
  3. To access Plinth (from host), visit https://localhost:4430/plinth/

  4. Edit the source code in your host machine's Plinth development folder. By default, this folder is shared within the VM, at /vagrant/. To actually reflect the changes in the running VM, run on your host:

    $ vagrant provision
    

Installing Dependencies

Apart from dependencies listing in INSTALL.md file, Plinth may have additional dependencies required by modules of Plinth. To install these, run:

$ sudo apt install -y $(plinth --list-dependencies)

Manually Setting Up for Development

It is recommended that you use Vagrant to setup your development environment. However, for some reason, you wish setup manually, the following tips will help:

  1. Instead of running setup.py install after every source modification, run the following command:

    $ sudo python3 setup.py develop
    

    This will install the python package in a special development mode. Run it normally. Any updates to the code (and core package data files) do not require re-installation after every modification.

    CherryPy web server also monitors changes to the source files and reloads the server as soon as a file is modified. Hence it is usually sufficient to modify the source and refresh the browser page to see the changes.

  2. Plinth also support running without installing (as much as possible). Simply run it as:

    $ sudo ./run --debug
    

    In this mode, Plinth runs in working directory without need for installation. It uses the plinth.conf config file in the working directory if no regular config file (/etc/plinth/plinth.conf) is found. It creates all that data and runtime files in data/var/*.

    Note: This mode is supported only in a limited manner. The following are the unknown issues with it:

    1. Help pages are also not built. Run make -C doc manually.

    2. Actions do not work when running as normal user without sudo prefix. You need to add actions directory to be allowed for sudo commands. See data/etc/sudoers.d/plinth for a hint.

Testing Inside a Virtual Machine

  1. Checkout source on the host.

  2. Share the source folder and mount it on virtual machine. This could be done over NFS, SSH-fs or 'Shared Folders' feature on VirtualBox.

  3. Run setup.py develop or setup.py install as described above on guest machine.

  4. Access the guest machine's Plinth web UI from host after setting bridging or NATing for guest virtual machine.

Running Tests

To run tests:

$ python3 setup.py test

Running the Test Coverage Analysis

To run the coverage tool:

$ python3 setup.py test_coverage

Invoking this command generates a binary-format .coverage data file in the top-level project directory which is recreated with each run, and writes a set of HTML and other supporting files which comprise the browsable coverage report to the plinth/tests/coverage/report directory. Index.html presents the coverage summary, broken down by module. Data columns can be sorted by clicking on the column header or by using mnemonic hot-keys specified in the keyboard widget in the upper-right corner of the page. Clicking on the name of a particular source file opens a page that displays the contents of that file, with color-coding in the left margin to indicate which statements or branches were executed via the tests (green) and which statements or branches were not executed (red).

Building the Documentation Separately

Plinth man page is built from DocBook source in the doc/ directory. FreedomBox manual is downloaded from the wiki is also available there. Both these are build during the installation process.

To build the documentation separately, run:

$ make -C doc

Repository

Plinth is available from GitHub.

Bugs & TODO

You can report bugs on Plinth's issue tracker.

See CONTRIBUTING.md for information how to best contribute code.

Internationalization

To mark text for translation, Plinth uses Django's translation strings. A module should e.g. from django.utils.translation import ugettext as _ and wrap user-facing text with _(). Use it like this:

message = _('Application successfully installed and configured.')

Translations

The easiest way to start translating is with your browser, by using Weblate. Your changes will automatically get pushed to the code repository.

Alternatively, you can directly edit the .po file in your language directory Plinth/plinth/locale/ and create a pull request (see CONTRIBUTING.md). In that case, consider introducing yourself on #freedombox IRC (irc.debian.org), because some work may have been done already on the Debian translators discussion lists or the Weblate localization platform.

For more information on translations: https://wiki.debian.org/FreedomBox/Translate